Archive - October 2024

1
Dorothy Crews Herzberg New Book (Nigeria)
2
The Pen that Created the Peace Corps For Sale!
3
New Executive Director named for White House Initiative on AANHPI
4
The Peace Corps—Our Story Alone To Write
5
Human Rights Watch Mourns Middle East Expert RPCV Joe Stork. (Turkey)
6
Diary of the Ouagadougou Doctor by Milt Kogan (PC Staff Doctor Burkina Faso)
7
    Trump will End the Peace Corps
8
John Chromy (October 11, 1942 – October 19, 2024)
9
MAGICAL THINKING by Kathleen Coskran (Ethiopia)
10
Publishing Your Peace Corps Story
11
Peace Corps Director Carol Spahn Gives Life Advice at IGNITE Event
12
PCVs Strengthen US-Cambodia Ties Through Education
13
Up Close with RPCV Mark Ford (Chad)
14
Vietnam welcomes largest group of Peace Corps Volunteers in History
15
Where Have all the Peace Corps Volunteers Gone?

Dorothy Crews Herzberg New Book (Nigeria)

It’s a Small World After All by Dorothy Crews Herzberg (Nigeria 1961-63) IndependentlyPublished 132 pages October 2024 $12.00 (Paperback)   When Dorothy Crews Herzberg joined the Peace Corps in 1961, she was unaware that the program had not yet been approved by the U.S. Congress. The Corps’ proponents were hedging the strategy that having four hundred volunteers already working overseas would strengthen their case. While serving in the Peace Corps Dorothy Crews married Hershel Herzberg, and from 1961 to 1963 they wrote letters to her parents. Dorothy’s father saved and carefully preserved the fragile blue air letters. Every page of “Me, Madam” illuminates the energy of Nigeria immediately after independence. The author’s letters convey with intimacy what it was like to be there as the people struggled to create a new democracy.  

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The Pen that Created the Peace Corps For Sale!

Thanks for the ‘heads up’ from Wm Evensen (Peru 1964-66) Description John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson: Collection of Presidential Bill Signing Pens. Likely the finest collection of Bill Signing Pens ever assembled. A set of 50 fountain pens, used by Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, housed in a 27 1/2″ x 38″ frame with green backing, the presidential seal at the top center, and with the caption “With these fifty pens, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law the foundation of the great society which was passed by the historic and fabulous first session of the 89th Congress” at the bottom of the frame. The opened pens measure out to 5.25″ long and the closed capped pens measure out to 6.25″ long. Each pen has a caption box beneath it with the name of the act signed into law and the date of when it happened. While the presentation does . . .

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New Executive Director named for White House Initiative on AANHPI

New Executive Director named for White House Initiative on AANHPI WHITE HOUSE Helen Beadreau takes over the helm of the Biden administration’s WHAANHPI. The White House Initiative on Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders (WHIAANHPI) and the President’s Advisory Commission on Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders announced Helen Beaudreau  as its new executive director. Beaudreau succeeds Krystal Ka‘ai, who was appointed by President Biden in May 2021 as the first Native Hawaiian to lead both the WHIAANHPI and the President’s Advisory Commission. Ka‘ai stepped down from her role as Executive Director on Oct. 5, 2024 and joined the President’s Advisory Commission on Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders on Oct. 7. “Helen Beaudreau has spent her career working to advance equity for underserved communities.” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.  “WHIAANHPI has important work to do – addressing anti-Asian bias, expanding language access, promoting equitable access to . . .

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The Peace Corps—Our Story Alone To Write

During the 1950s, two societal impulses swept across America. One impulse that characterized the decade was detailed in two best-selling books of the era: the 1955 novel by Sloan Wilson, The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit, and the non-fiction book, The Organization Man, written by William H. Whyte and published in 1956. These books looked at the “American way of life” and how men got ahead in their work and in society. Both are bleak takes on the corporate world. These books were underscored by Ayn Rand’s ideas as expressed in the novel Atlas Shrugged, published in 1957. Her philosophy of Objectivism proposed reason as man’s only proper judge of values and his only proper guide to action. Every man, according to Rand, was an end in himself. He must work for rational self-interest, neither sacrificing himself to others nor sacrificing others to himself. Objectivism rejected any form of . . .

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Human Rights Watch Mourns Middle East Expert RPCV Joe Stork. (Turkey)

Human Rights Watch Mourns Middle East Expert Joe Stork Human Rights Watch 26th October 2024, Joe Stork, a beloved mentor and friend to human rights activists across the Middle East and a treasured colleague whose career at Human Rights Watch spanned more than three decades, died unexpectedly on October 23, 2024, at his home in Washington, DC. He was 81. Stork, who joined Human Rights Watch in 1996 as the Middle East and North Africa Division’s advocacy director and later became the division’s deputy director, played a pivotal role in shaping the division into what it is today. One of his first assignments with Human Rights Watch was to document rampant abuses in Bahrain, a country on which he continued to do research and advocacy for decades. “Anyone who had the pleasure of crossing paths with Joe will remember him not just for his brilliant mind and shrewd advocacy, but . . .

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Diary of the Ouagadougou Doctor by Milt Kogan (PC Staff Doctor Burkina Faso)

Diary of the Ouagadougou Doctor A Peace Corps Experience Author House Publisher by Milt Kogan, M.D. (Burkina Faso 1969-72) Published in 2010 $16.71 (Paperback); $22.49 (Hardback) The book is a collection of excerpts from a diary written while serving as a Peace Corps Physician in Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso).     Milt Kogan, M.D. has been working as a doctor and an actor in Hollywood for 50 years. He is best known for playing the desk sergeant, Officer Kogan, on the television series Barney Miller in 1975. Medically, he has been working in geriatric psychiatry. He is Board-Certified in Family Medicine and has an MPH in Epidemiology from U.C.L.A. As an actor, he is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and votes for the Oscars and is a member of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and votes for the Emmys. He has amassed . . .

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    Trump will End the Peace Corps

                      If Trump Is Elected– End the Peace Corps In his few years as President (2017-2021), Donald Trumps did not think much about the Peace Corps. In his very first year as president, in 2017, he eliminated more than 20 percent of the staff. In 2017, newspaper columnist Gene Michol, visiting his Peace Corps daughter in the Gambia, wrote in an ob-ed piece how Trump was trying to eliminate the Peace Corps, writing, “In Trump’s world these young heroes are losers. They toil in obscurity. They come home broke. They put others’ comfort and prospects above their own. They don’t want the world to quake in fear at America’s greatness. Their patriotism calls them to use marked skills, boundless energies and opened arms to forge partnership with less generously blessed peoples across the globe. “To our president, they’re chumps. For . . .

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John Chromy (October 11, 1942 – October 19, 2024)

John William Chromy, age 82, of Chevy Chase, Maryland, has concluded a full life of service, countless friendships, and worldwide adventures. John was born in New Prague, Minnesota. He grew up on the family farm with his parents, Stanley W. Chromy Sr. and Mary R. (Horejsi) Chromy, and his eight siblings. He attended St. Wenceslaus Catholic School and graduated from New Prague High School in 1960. He attended St. John’s University but left in 1963, answering President Kennedy’s challenge for young Americans to serve in the newly formed Peace Corps. After two years of service in India as a Peace Corps volunteer (1963-65), he returned to St. John’s University and finished his B.A. in History in 1964. A natural leader, John shared his early adventures with his first wife, Patricia Ward Chromy (1942-1984), and their two daughters, Maureen and Caroline, serving as Peace Corps staff in India (1967-1969) and Peace . . .

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MAGICAL THINKING by Kathleen Coskran (Ethiopia)

Magical Thinking by Kathleen Coskran (Ethiopia 1965-67)        It was quiet. Too quiet. Too still. Not a leaf moving in the old maple on the boulevard and across the street, the neighbor’s flag hung limply over the TRUMP sign, was plastered over the sign. The thunderstorm that had swept through overnight had cleaned the sidewalks, filled the gutters, and, now she saw, covered the offensive sign, the American flag itself covering what needed to be covered.     She thought of taking a picture and sending it to…to somebody…the New York Times? the local Trump campaign office? the Harris-Walz campaign? with an appropriate title, “At Last” or “Democracy Saved.” Well, she’d have to think about that. Was that too bitter, too mean, or obvious? What was the word? She wasn’t used to these emotions, to the disdain, or was it the fear that rose immediately the day she saw Henry, . . .

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Publishing Your Peace Corps Story

Publishing Your Peace Corps Story Finding an Agent Yes, it is difficult to find an agent. But you can start here and have a list of names, addresses, and what these agents want to see. http://www.1000literaryagents.com. Remember, if an agent says he or she only publishes YA novels then don’t send them your Peace Corps story, unless, of course, it is written for Young Adults. Agents are in the business (and it is very much a business) of making money so if they think your book will sell, they will represent you. If they think your book is wonderful but won’t sell to a publisher, they won’t represent you. Very few agents are in the business of literature. They leave that work to the academics. Editors & Publishers You have heard, I’m sure, how Catch 22 went to more than 50 publishing houses before it was published back in 1960. That novel is . . .

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Peace Corps Director Carol Spahn Gives Life Advice at IGNITE Event

Peace Corps Director Carol Spahn Gives Life Advice at IGNITE Event  cuatower  October 17, 2024  0 By Mariam Baldwin IGNITE, an organization that seeks to empower women in politics, hosted Peace Corps Director Carol Spahn in the Pryz Great Rooms on Tuesday, October 9. Spahn is a CUA alumna who was appointed by President Joe Biden as head of the Peace Corps in 2022. She talked to CUA students about a multitude of topics, such as her beginnings in the Peace Corps, impostor syndrome, and the challenges of leadership. The second portion of her talk was a Q&A where students could ask her anything they wanted. Spahn first served as a Peace Corps volunteer in post-Cold War Romania from 1994 to 1996. Later, she would serve as the Country Director of Peace Corps Malawi.These experiences are what made Spahn who she is today. Candidly, she talked about struggling with impostor syndrome early . . .

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PCVs Strengthen US-Cambodia Ties Through Education

Thanks for the “heads up’ from Dale Gilles (Liberia 1964-66) Peace Corps Volunteers strengthen US-Cambodia ties through education Post In-depth 18 October 2024 | 19:13 ICT  Reporter : Hong Raksmey Thirty-two Peace Corps volunteers pledged to serve Cambodian communities for two years at a swearing-in ceremony on October 18 in Phnom Penh. Hong Raksmey In a modest home nestled in the lush landscapes of Takeo province’s Bati district, a group of American Peace Corps volunteers are forging deep connections with their Cambodian host families. Katheryn Potts, one of the newest volunteers, recalls her first day, arriving in Phnom Penh with wide eyes, excited and ready to work. “Every day, we learned the Khmer language and teaching methods, but our true learning happened at home, where we spent time with our Cambodian families,” she says, speaking in Khmer. “My host mother would always call me to eat together, and we shared laughter . . .

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Up Close with RPCV Mark Ford (Chad)

Up Close with RPCV Mark Ford John ThomasonOctober 18, 2024 Mark Ford at Paradise Palms, photo by Aaron Bristol For the past 11 years, Mark Ford has been building his personal Eden in western Delray Beach. Situated on secluded Half Mile Road, the 20 accessible acres of Paradise Palms contain 600 species of palm trees among more than 2,000 different specimens, organized in their own mini-biomes, from rainforest to desert. Visitors wend their way through countless palms—exotic plants from New Guinea, Borneo, Thailand, Australia—and toward burbling fountains, a meditation garden framed by the creaking sway of bamboo, a koi pond and a hedge maze that’s so byzantine that visitors have reportedly lost themselves within it. There’s a children’s play area, an Asian tearoom, a yoga house, and a private residence with pool, hammocks and fire pit. Sculptures from Central and North American artists dot the property in strategic spots—metal and . . .

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Vietnam welcomes largest group of Peace Corps Volunteers in History

October 18, 2024 Vietnam has welcomed its largest group of US Peace Corps volunteers since the programme began, with 20 volunteers arriving this month to support English education in Vietnamese high schools. This milestone follows the 2020 Implementing Agreement between the US and Vietnamese governments, with Peace Corps and the Ministry of Education and Training (MOET) as the implementing entities. The volunteers will be based in high schools across Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City starting in December 2024. They will work alongside local teachers to develop Vietnamese students’ English skills, creating greater access to educational and employment opportunities. Some volunteers will co-teach in schools where current volunteers are now concluding their service. “This is the largest group of Peace Corps volunteer trainees arriving to serve in Vietnam. It heralds continued goodwill as Peace Corps builds relationships and trust with our partners,” said Mikel Herrington, Peace Corps Vietnam Country Director. . . .

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Where Have all the Peace Corps Volunteers Gone?

Where Have all the Peace Corps Volunteers Gone? By Ambassador Mark A. Green  on October 15, 2024             John F. Kennedy greets Volunteers on August 28, 1962. I often trace the beginnings of my foreign policy and international development work back to the village school in Kenya where my wife Sue and I served as WorldTeach volunteers. That work presented many challenges, but the village was also ahead of many others in the area because a Peace Corps Volunteer served there before us. I often point to my time as US ambassador to Tanzania as the high point of my career in foreign policy. When I entered the State House to present my credentials to President Jakaya Kikwete in 2007, a Tanzanian protocol officer proudly took me aside and related how he had once been taught by a Peace Corps Volunteer. When President John F. Kennedy established . . .

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